Digby Fairweather

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Digby Fairweather (b. Rochford, Essex, UK, April 25, 1946) is a British jazz trumpeter and cornettist. Fairweather has been a professional jazz musician since January 1, 1977, but worked for seven years before this date with several local jazz bands in the Essex area and recorded his first album in 1975. When turning professional, Fairweather helped found the Keith Nichols Midnite Follies Orchestra, started recording solo albums, and joined a quartet known as Velvet with guitarists Denny Wright and Ike Isaacs plus champion bassist Len Skeat. Before becoming a professional musician he was a librarian and he has retained a strong interest in jazz bibliography and archiving.

In 1979 Fairweather became co-director of the non-profit Jazz College along with pianist Stan Barker and he also joined the Pizza Express All Stars. In 1982 Fairweather began leading a quartet of his own and helped revitalize Kettners Five along with bassist Tiny Winters. Digby’s playing has been influenced especially by Nat Gonella and Louis Armstrong, and in recent years his Digby’s Half Dozen band has provided the regular accompaniment for the singer George Melly. Apart from his playing and bandleading, Fairweather has long pursued a parallel career as a broadcaster and writer on jazz.

In 1985 he worked in a Brian Priestley septet and authored the book How to Play Trumpet. By this time he was actively broadcasting for the BBC for Humphrey Lyttelton on the show Best of Jazz. In 1987 Fairweather founded the Association of British Jazz Musicians and the National Jazz Archive. That same year he became leader of the Jazz Superkings. Fairweather also helped bring jazz musicians into the British Musicians’ Union in 1990. During the early portion of the 1990s Fairweather was hosting radio shows on London Jazz FM, respectively called Jazz Parade and Jazznotes. In 1994 he began working with The Great British Jazz Band and continues to teach and do solo work.


Contents

[edit] Awards

BBC Jazz Society Musician of the Year (1979)

Benno Haussman Award (1993; Cork Jazz Festival)

[edit] Discography

Jubilee (1993; Candid Records)

Squeezin' the Blues Away (1994; FMR Records)

[edit] Further reading

[edit] External links

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